OT: 48 Hour Film Project

JasonATL wrote on 8/14/2012, 7:34 AM
I just wrapped up a weekend of doing the 48 Hour Film Project for the first time. In fact, this was my first real scripted narrative film, ever.

Having played around a little with other editing packages, I think that I can say that it would have been much more difficult to accomplish the feat with something other than Vegas Pro.

For those who don't know, the 48 Hour Film Project is a festival/competition in which filmmakers "compete" in each city to make a 4-7 minute complete film in 48 hours (I don't really think of it as much as a competition, but there is a "winner" from each city). On Friday, teams meet and are each assigned at random a different genre. All teams then are assigned a prop, a character (e.g., Daniel or Danielle Martin, doctor), and a line of dialogue, all of which must be included in the film, but not necessarily a key component. All creative activity must take place from that point on, and a complete and rendered film must be submitted by 7:30 PM Sunday.

My team was very organized. My wife, the producer, and I enlisted a friend who has written novels to be our writer. We asked other friends to join us, only two of which had the weekend open. We talked to my daughter's piano teacher about doing the music/score for the film, as she plays a lot of instruments, including the harp. She ends up being a star in the film. The rest of the cast and crew were local folks that we previously had never met, most from the local stage company and one film student at the local university who was my AC. All of us are volunteers. We had an organizational meeting on the Sunday before to discuss logistics and to find out what talents the cast and crew had, so that we could have them in mind as we wrote the script.

The good organization paid off, as we wrote the script Friday night and had a call time of 8 AM Saturday to start shooting: 12 scenes and 4 locations all done in 11 hours. From there, I edited in Vegas Pro 11 (no crashes!). I had a reasonable first cut done by midnight and then colored it by around 3 AM. A few hours of sleep, then more tweaks to the edit, dubbed in some audio from alternate takes to further clean it up, add titles, credits, etc. And delivered the film 30 minutes early. Plus, we actually live 90 minutes from the city in which we competed, so it was really a 46ish hour project for us (I won't deduct the first hour, since we brainstormed the entire story/concept in the car ride home Friday night).

Anyway, for me, as an amateur, it was a great experience. I learned a lot in a short amount of time. I won't say it was fun, since we didn't have time to really enjoy it as it happened. But, it wasn't unpleasant or stressful, either. It is fun to have done it. Of course, there are things I would do a little differently in the film. But, in 48 hours, perfection is definitely the enemy of the good, and we all recognized that. We're very happy with what we were able to make.

Our great cast and crew made it a pleasure and their talents really show in the final product.

I can't post the film online for another couple of days, after the premiere screenings (can't wait to see my film on the big screen in the theater!). But, here's a link to a trailer that doesn't do the film justice.

https://vimeo.com/47484291

Comments

wwjd wrote on 8/14/2012, 11:35 AM
Just did one of these in DSM and made the top 15. Good yet stressful times. :)

Your video looks great! Now work on audio. It was kind of all over. (I know it was a rushed production) Video guys never seem to know audio. hahahah Ima audio guy getting into video.
Anyway, try free LOUDMAX VST plugin to even things out. Sometimes even on the master. Only two controls... you'll figure it out quickly.
And learn about GATING audio to make things cleaner.
...there there is EQ.... :D
JasonATL wrote on 8/14/2012, 11:40 AM
Yes, I'm very much still learning the audio. I believe it is the weakest part of our film.
wwjd wrote on 8/14/2012, 3:05 PM
having sat through 2 nights of 48 films, it is the weakest part of MOST everyone's films! :D Easiest fix is CROSSFADING audio tween all edits, watch levels or bring up with loudmax, record clean, GATE out extra crap
TheHappyFriar wrote on 8/14/2012, 6:22 PM
I did our fifth film on the 3-5th of August. It's a lot of fun, This year I only had ~20 second of video, the rest of the film was done via stills. I completely forgot to check the VO's and they were to low. But, there were conversation bubbles on screen so it wasn't to bad. :D 140 tracks I think, all grouped together based on the scene (Vegas 10). W/o the group feature I wouldn't of been able to edit as fast as I did.

So we'll get to see your full film after it premieres, right? :)
JasonATL wrote on 8/14/2012, 7:17 PM
So we'll get to see your full film after it premieres, right?

I'll show you mine, if you show me yours! ;)

Seriously, yes. I do plan on posting the entire film, perhaps after the awards screening.
TheHappyFriar wrote on 8/14/2012, 8:28 PM
The rules say you can't post it for others to see until it's premiered, took me an extra day because of a lack of usable memory. :)

I don't want to hijack your thread though, but if you insist... ;)



Character: Chantal or Charles Harvey, Cartoonist
Prop: a wallet
Line: "What can I do to help?"

We had horror (second time). None of us are horror fans, the depends we go in to horror are Evil Dead & Scream. We won award for our sci-fi film, best FX. That was the last year they did fan choice awards except best film. I was in the Buffalo one, ~22 teams total.

Shot with a Cannon Digital Rebel XT, Sony HVR-1000U. Colorized in Gimp, motion tracking in Syntheyes, 3D in Blender, all editing/compositing in Vegas. I want to post the project so people here can see, it's the BIGGEST project file I've ever done. Vertical wise, anyway.
JasonATL wrote on 8/14/2012, 9:07 PM
Friar - I love it! Great job! It thought the concept you used was great and the story was tight. I really like the comic-book approach to telling the story here. It just fit well with the story. You absolutely should have been so proud of this film.
TheHappyFriar wrote on 8/14/2012, 9:46 PM
thanks. :)
JasonATL wrote on 8/17/2012, 6:28 AM
Here's the full film that premiered the last two nights: https://vimeo.com/47700064

I hope we accomplished our goal not to embarrass ourselves.
TheHappyFriar wrote on 8/17/2012, 8:48 PM
That was awesome. :)

Thanks for sharing!
TheHappyFriar wrote on 8/25/2012, 1:12 PM
Yesterday our team's video was in the "Best Of" showing for Buffalo. :)
JasonATL wrote on 8/26/2012, 1:46 PM
Congrats, Friar!

We had our awards screening last Thursday. I attended and got to see the films for a second time. Given how anxious I was the first time to see ours screened in front of an audience, I enjoyed seeing the other teams' films again. I was struck and how some of them really looked better on the second time through. Out of the 12 screened, there were only a couple that were really rough. Most had one or two elements that really held them back, but a few were good at almost everything (sound being everyone's challenge -- perhpas that's why the "Slient Film" one won?!).

In our city, they "spread the wealth" with the awards. Given how good the field was, I think that was appropriate. We won (tied, actually) for "Best Cinematography". My guess is that another film might have deserved it over us; but again, I think the recognition for the teams that got an award, including ours (though not necessarily for cinematography), was well-deserved.

Anyone who hasn't done a 48HFP, but has considered it, should jump in. I was a fun experience and very educational for me.